Zach Anderson
Mar 03, 2026 14:09
DeCard’s stablecoin card now works at 150 million merchants globally, using Polygon (MATIC)’s sub-cent fees for settlement. Lunar New Year campaign drove 10% user growth.
DeCard has opened stablecoin spending to over 150 million merchants worldwide by using Polygon (MATIC) as its settlement backbone, marking one of the largest real-world crypto payment integrations to date. The card lets users load USDC and USDT, then spend at any point-of-sale terminal without merchants touching blockchain infrastructure.
The pitch is simple: consumers get stablecoin utility, merchants see normal card transactions, and Polygon handles settlement at roughly $0.001 per transaction with finality under 5 seconds.
How the Plumbing Works
DeCard, developed by DCS (formerly Diners Club Singapore), abstracts away crypto entirely from the merchant side. Users deposit stablecoins into a D-Vault account, swipe their card at checkout, and the system converts to fiat before hitting the merchant’s existing payment processor.
Polygon sits underneath as the settlement layer, processing the stablecoin movement while traditional rails handle the merchant-facing transaction. It’s blockchain as infrastructure rather than user experience—exactly the approach gaining traction among payments builders who’ve watched consumer-facing crypto wallets struggle with adoption.
The timing aligns with Polygon’s growing stablecoin footprint. Network stablecoin supply hit a record $3.28 billion in late February 2026, according to recent data. The chain processes over $2.3 trillion in annual stablecoin volume, giving it the throughput credentials for payment-scale operations.
Campaign Numbers Show Real Traction
DeCard’s Lunar New Year promotion, which wrapped in late February, offers a window into adoption mechanics. The campaign delivered a 10% increase in users spending via Polygon and distributed over 357,000 DePoints—loyalty tokens redeemable for cash credit and travel rewards.
Those aren’t massive numbers in absolute terms, but they demonstrate something payments teams have struggled to prove: that onchain loyalty programs can actually drive conversion. The DePoints system ties blockchain-verifiable rewards to spending behavior, creating a feedback loop that traditional loyalty programs can’t easily replicate.
Polygon’s Enterprise Play Takes Shape
This integration fits a broader pattern. Polygon Labs dropped $250 million in January 2026 to acquire Coinme and Sequence, explicitly targeting stablecoin payment infrastructure. Days before the DeCard announcement, the team detailed its “Open Money Stack” architecture aimed at enterprise stablecoin adoption.
The network’s technical specs matter here. Sub-cent transaction fees make small retail purchases economically viable—something that’s killed previous crypto payment attempts where gas costs exceeded coffee prices. Five-second finality means settlement happens faster than traditional card networks, even if consumers never notice the difference.
What This Means for Stablecoin Bulls
The 150 million merchant figure deserves context. That’s the theoretical reach through existing card network partnerships, not 150 million merchants actively processing stablecoin transactions. Real adoption will depend on user growth, geographic rollout, and whether the experience actually feels seamless enough to compete with Apple Pay.
Still, the model addresses the core stablecoin paradox: billions in circulation, limited ways to actually spend them. If DeCard’s approach scales, it validates Polygon’s bet that settlement infrastructure—not consumer wallets—is where blockchain captures payments value.
MATIC trades around $1.05 with a $1.056 billion market cap, up 3.68% over 24 hours as of March 1. The DeCard partnership won’t move that needle immediately, but payment volume flowing through the network adds to the fundamental case for long-term holders watching enterprise adoption unfold.
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